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Subhrendu K. Pattanayak

Oak Foundation Distinguished Professor of Environmental and Energy Policy
Sanford School of Public Policy
Box 90312, Durham, NC 27708-0312
252 Rubenstein Hall, Box 90312, Durham, NC 27708-0312

Overview


Subhrendu K. Pattanayak is the Oak Professor of Environmental and Energy Policy at Duke University. He studies the causes and consequences of human behaviors related to the natural environment to help design and evaluate policy interventions in low-income tropical countries. His research is in three domains at the intersection of environment, development, health and energy: forest ecosystem services, environmental health (diarrhea, malaria, respiratory infections) and household energy transitions. He has focused on design of institutions and policies that are motivated by enormous inequities and a range of efficiency concerns (externalities, public goods and imperfect information and competition).

Dr. Pattanayak approaches these problems through systematic reviews of the literature (meta-analyses) and statistical modeling with high-resolution objective data collected in the field. He then uses those data to test hypotheses salient to policy manipulation, developed both from economic frameworks, stakeholder discussions and direct observations in the field. He employs empirical methods that exploit quasi-experimental variation (or experiments where feasible and appropriate), captured through household, community and institutional surveys. He typically matches these survey data with meso-scale secondary statistics and estimates econometric models to generate policy parameters. Dr. Pattanayak has collaborated closely with multi-lateral agencies, NGOs, governments, and local academics in Brazil, Costa Rica, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Nepal, Sri Lanka and the U.S.

Current Appointments & Affiliations


Oak Foundation Distinguished Professor of Environmental and Energy Policy · 2018 - Present Sanford School of Public Policy
Professor in the Sanford School of Public Policy · 2013 - Present Sanford School of Public Policy
Professor in the Department of Economics · 2013 - Present Economics, Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Professor of Environmental Science and Policy · 2013 - Present Environmental Sciences and Policy, Nicholas School of the Environment
Research Professor of Global Health · 2011 - Present Duke Global Health Institute, University Institutes and Centers
Affiliate of the Duke Center for International Development · 2023 - Present Duke Center for International Development, Sanford School of Public Policy
Faculty Research Scholar of DuPRI's Population Research Center · 2010 - Present Duke Population Research Center, Duke Population Research Institute

In the News


Published March 15, 2023
Podcast: How Cleaner Cookstoves Can Help Build a Healthier Planet
Published July 26, 2021
Making a Scientific Miracle Count in the Real World
Published May 20, 2019
Small Cookstoves Can Reduce Carbon Emissions. Here's How Rural Populations Can Make the Switch

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Recent Publications


Does the payment vehicle matter for valuing improved electricity reliability? A discrete choice experiment in Ethiopia

Journal Article Utilities Policy · April 1, 2025 Frequent and prolonged power outages severely impede business operations in many developing countries. Given resource constraints, estimating the value of improved electricity reliability in such contexts is crucial for justifying related investments. This ... Full text Cite

Gendered demand for environmental health technologies: Evidence of complementarities from stove auctions in India

Journal Article Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics · December 1, 2024 We study if prior exposure to one environmental health technology – improved sanitation – complements or substitutes for additional household investments in another such technology — an electric induction cookstove. We conducted a cookstove demand revealin ... Full text Cite

Critical mineral mining in the energy transition: A systematic review of environmental, social, and governance risks and opportunities

Journal Article Energy Research and Social Science · October 1, 2024 To address climate change, countries must decarbonize and shift to renewable energy. Renewables like solar and wind are mineral intensive, meaning the world must rapidly scale up mining and processing of critical minerals such as lithium and cobalt. Such a ... Full text Cite
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Recent Grants


Social impact assessment of FSC in Brazil

ResearchPrincipal Investigator · Awarded by Center for International Forestry Research · 2024 - 2026

Sierre Leone Willingness to Pay (WtP) Study

ResearchCo Investigator · Awarded by Social Impact · 2022 - 2023

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Education, Training & Certifications


Duke University · 1997 Ph.D.
Purdue University · 1992 M.S.
St. Stephen's College, Delhi (India) · 1990 B.A.